Times Colonist

CBC’s new paid streaming app ‘an experiment’

- DAVID FRIEND

TORONTO — While Netflix and CraveTV boast about their arsenals of blockbuste­r series, the CBC’s new streaming app is hoping to find a niche with news junkies and hockey fans.

The national broadcaste­r has lobbed a uniquely Canadian offering into the streaming marketplac­e that could appeal to cord cutters who have missed some homegrown content since giving up on their cable packages.

For $4.99 a month, consumers get a live stream of the CBC News Network and commercial-free access to the CBC’s TV library, including Kim’s Convenienc­e, Baroness Von Sketch Show and Schitt’s Creek.

But viewers don’t necessaril­y have to pony up the subscripti­on fee to watch most of the content. A free version of the app doesn’t include access to CBC’s news channel but still streams the network’s TV shows with commercial­s.

There’s also free access to live streams of CBC’s 14 regional local TV channels, no matter where you are in Canada, including Saturday night broadcasts of Hockey Night in Canada.

Throwing open the doors to its programmin­g is part of an experiment to see how viewers will react, said Richard Kanee, the CBC’s executive director of digital.

“What we’re doing at this stage is trying to learn with our audience,” he said. “For us, this is all a starting point.”

Users can access the paid features on Apple smartphone­s and Apple TV boxes, though it won’t be available on Android devices until April 2018.

The CBC has often been at the forefront of streaming major events such as the Olympics and last year’s farewell show performed by the Tragically Hip in Kingston, Ont.

Those past experience­s give the broadcaste­r an advantage as it pushes forward with viewership experiment­s, said Kaan Yigit, a technology analyst at Solutions Research Group. He suggested the CBC has plentiful resources versus its broadcast competitor­s, helped by annual funding contributi­ons from the federal government, and owns rights to a notable chunk of its programmin­g.

“That does help in terms of being able to commit to the scale of this kind of operation,” he said.

CBC News Network has already been offered as a standalone streaming service for years for $6.95 a month.

Kanee said the CBC carefully considered the pricing of its new premium app by comparing against other streaming services such as Sportsnet Now ($24.99 a month), Netflix ($8.99 and up) and CraveTV ($7.99).

He said the revamped CBC app is part of the broadcaste­r’s ongoing efforts to meet the requiremen­ts of its government-instituted mandate under the Broadcasti­ng Act. The CBC is required to make its programmin­g accessible throughout the country by the most appropriat­e and efficient means available.

The CBC has also taken its marquee news program The National online and streams it live, for free, across a number of platforms, including Facebook and YouTube.

Brahm Eiley, president of Convergenc­e Research Group, suggested the CBC’s new premium app will be especially attractive to the more than four million Canadian households that don’t have a traditiona­l cable or satellite package.

“There’s huge space for these types of products,” Eiley said.

“In the long run it’s the right move. This is where things are going.”

 ??  ?? The CBC is offering a variety of services with its new app.
The CBC is offering a variety of services with its new app.

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